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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  January 19, 2013 4:00am-5:00am EST

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can then be a much more honest feeling person. i don't think lance armstrong really knows who lance armstrong is. >> dr. jeff gardere, thank you for joining us on the ed show. appreciate it so much. that is the ed show. i'm ed schultz. the rachel maddow show starts right now. good evening, rachel. >> good evening, ed. i'll see you in d.c. >> i might jump out of the booth and join the parade. >> i'll see you there. >> you bet. >> thanks for joining us tonight. have you ever heard of the vix? it's spelled v-i-x for volatility index. it's sometimes called the fear index. vix is a numerical index of volatility and fear in the stock market. it tells us in chart form, in numerical form how these guys are feeling, if they get spooked by their bosses, clients, horoscopes, whatever. if they start trading like crazy people for whatever reason, the
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vix goes up. it registers fear. what causes the vix to spike typically is news about the economy. actual real-world events. this, for example, is what happened to the vix on october 24th, 2008, that big red arrow there. that's when the stock market crashed in '08, one of the worst days of the great recession, record high vix. another spike happened may 20th, 2010 when there was sudden new that is europe's economy was even in worse shape than we thought. it spiked at a two-year high august 8th, 2011, when the u.s. credit rating got downgraded. republicans in congress threatened to default on our national debt and credit rating got downgraded. wall street freaked out. vix went way up. you can think of a high vix reading, a spike in the vix as a red light flashing. alert, alert. maybe your economy is tanking. maybe it isn't. but a lot of people on wall street have reason to believe that it is.
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panic. today, as he kicks off his inauguration weekend, president obama was given a great present by the vix. this is the present that vix gave to barack obama today to celebrate his inauguration as a second-term president of the united states. look. happy inauguration, mr. president. things are kind of okay. in fact, today's low vix is the lowest vix since the spring of 2007. that's vix going down. vix is low. fear is low. also for the record, the dow jones hit a five-year high today. mazletov mr. president. eric cantore telling the world, quote, next week we will authorize a three-month temporary debt ceiling increase.
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that was the announcement from the majority leader of the house republicans announcing they are giving up on what they had been saying for months was their plan, to not approve an increase in the debt ceiling to thereby push the country again into a self-imposed economic crisis and threat of defaulting on our national debt and all the panic we know that causes because they did it before in 2011. and eric cantore announced today they are not going to do that again even though they had been saying for months that they would. they gave up today on that threat. that's why the vix panic index stopped panicking today. that's the nice kickoff for what should be a nice weekend for the president. new second term official portrait. to refresh your memory, this is the first term one. same flag pin, similar blue tie, i guess. lots more gray up top. i don't know why they decided to go from the close cropped i.d. photo look from the first term to the i'm standing here in my office and i'm happy to be here look.
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i kind of like the new big smiling one. actually, there is a direct parallel here for a previous two-term president. check this out. this is ronald reagan's first-term portrait and this is ronald reagan's second-term portrait. put those up, side by side. that is how president reagan went from portrait one to portrait two. start of term one to start of term two. now look at president obama. see similarities there? it's not like every president does this. just reagan and now obama. i think people make too much of the political parallels between obama and reagan, but aesthetically, you kind of can't make too much of this one. in this case in the evolution of the official portrait, i think you can make as much of this parallel that you want to because that's kind of an uncanny thing, isn't it? the newport rat is out. the new term is about to start. we here at msnbc and everybody in the news business is gearing up for inaugural weekend coverage. this will be my second time
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covering an inauguration. we'll have the whole schedule for you of when everything happens and when it's going to be on tv. that's coming up a little later on in the show tonight. but, of course, at times like this, newbyes like me who have only covered one of these before or none of these before, we often turn to the veteran journalists among us for advice on how to handle an event like this, how to get the most out of an event that frankly is way too big to take in at once. the paragon of experience and grace under pressure was, of course, the great andrea mitchell who set a new standard in 2008 for dauntless reporting in coverage of a marathon political event including a memorial turn on a flatbed truck. on andrea's show today, 1:00 show on msnbc, andrea was talking about previous inaugurations and in so doing she was able to show footage of herself covering all of the inaugurations she has covered. it wasn't just 2009, right?
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it was 2005, george bush's second inaugural. she also covered 2001, the first bush inaugural. it was 1997, the bill clinton second inaugural. it was 1993, the first bill clinton inaugural. she was there also in 1989 when george bush, the elder took over. she was there in 1985, president reagan's re-election. she was there in 1981, the first reagan inaugural. that's andrea mitchell. if i end up doing these for as long as andrea mitchell has done these, i will be covering every inauguration from now until 2041, by which time i will be coming to you, presumably, as a hologram. so help me god. second inaugural, as opposed to a first inaugural when one president is leaving and another is starting, and we're covering a second inauguration, like we will be this year there's something different. governing is already under way. the president has started some things that he intends to finish
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in his second term. sort of a sense of continuity, well informed expectation about what kind of president this is going to be and where he is likely to go. when president obama was inaugurated. first time, there was none of that certainty and expectation, right? the country and all of us were caught up in the historical enormity of the fact that the united states of america was about to swear in our first african-american president. and that eight years of republican administration under bush and cheney was coming to an end. that inauguration in 2009 was such a dramatic break from the past, toward a whole new future that i don't think anybody expects that we will have an inauguration quite as consequential as the last one. maybe ever again. but we now know, as part of the historical record, that while the whole country was marveling at the enormity of the transition we were making on inauguration night 2009 something else was going on that night in washington and it had a very different vibe.
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do not ask what good we do inside the u.s. house of representatives. it came out this past april. in the front line documentary that aired this week on pbs, they got everybody to go on record about this. lest you thought this was an apocylpitical thing, this did happen. >> a group of republicans quietly gathered to develop plans for taking on the new president. >> a meeting, a dinner took place in the famous steakhouse in downtown washington with newt gingrich as sort of the emcee, if you will. >> the gathering of gop luminaries, top conservative congressman eric cantor, paul
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ryan, senate power brokers jim demint, jon kyl, tom coburn, event organizer frank luntz. >> they decided that they needed to begin to fight obama on everything. this meant unyielding opposition to every one of the obama administration's legislative initiatives. they all talked about this and they began to get more and more optimistic and they left feeling practically exuberant. >> count, count them ten official inaugural ball. >> stunning crowd of people. >> the new president had no idea what the republicans were planning. >> ladies and gentlemen, the president of the united states and first lady. >> surrounded by supporters at the inaugural balls, the mood was hopeful. ♪ at last my love
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>> didn't have a full sense of what washington was going to be like for him. he had not been in the middle of these kind of down and dirty fights. the ugly reality of governing in washington today. >> that really did end up being a hallmark of president obama's first term in office, right, what happened that first night, that first night of his inauguration, what the republicans were meeting about in washington that night became the story of a large part of his first term, trying to negotiate, trying to bargain, trying to come to middle ground with republicans and republicans saying, no, no. no, no, never. no, no. no matter what he offered. that is why we had a first term in which this president kept offering the republicans, that he would go along with their republican ideas and mysteriously, they would even say no to their own ideas. >> this law failed by seven votes. when seven republicans, who had co-sponsored the bill, had
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co-sponsored the idea suddenly walked away from their own proposal after i endorsed it. so they make a proposal, sign on to the bill. i say, great. good idea. i turned around, they're gone. what happened? >> this was a hallmark of president obama's first term. republicans were going to say no, no, no, no matter what he offered. even if what he offered was their own idea in the first place. that is how it went for months and then that is how it went for years. and now, what's new? he is not doing that anymore. >> i have put forward a very clear principle. i will not negotiate around the debt ceiling. we're not going to play the same game that we saw happen in 2011. so we're not going to do that. i will not negotiate around the debt ceiling. we're not going to do that
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again. as i said earlier this week, one thing i will not compromise over is whether or not congress should pay the tab for a bill they've already racked up. what i will not do is to have that negotiation with a gun at the head of the american people. that's not how we're going to do it this time. >> this evolution in the president's strategy for dealing with republicans and recognizing their strategy against him and knowing what he can and cannot expect to get out of them. on the last business day of his first term, it paid off today. and them giving up their demand that he needed to negotiate with them on the debt ceiling. today they recognized that they were not going to get that. and today the republicans caved. and the vix was very happy. at this point, the republicans are still trying to hand contingencies on this they're only going to cave to three months and then they'll be back to demanding negotiations again but essentially it is over. president obama called their bluff. business interests, markets, people that make decisions that
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contribute to this would blame them if they screwed up the country's economy again on purpose like they did in 2011. they have shown that they care enough about that to avoid that eventuality. they will no longer be able to make that bluff again, in three months or ever. three months we're going to be back here. nobody believes them. this weekend, the other thing that's happening in washington is the obama campaign legacy project. 4,000 obama campaign volunteers and supporters will be meeting this weekend at a hotel in washington, with the top brass of the obama election campaign, to talk about how the organization that got is president elected, not just once, but twice, can now be used for maximum political effect during his second term. the heavies of the obama political team, senior vizer david plouffe, top aides like robert gibbs now will be part of a campaign organization called organizing for action. it was announced today in a video by president obama and the first lady. nothing like this has ever
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happened before. politicians have talked before about the idea of a permanent campaign but the campaign structure that elected a president has never formally been turned into an organization designed to exist outside that white house in order to help that president get done what he wants to get done. the group says their first three priorities are supporting the changes that the president just proposed to stop gun violence, also climate change, also immigration. any one of those things is a huge political lift. taking on all three of them is a sign, i think, of seriousness for how hard this white house is planning on fighting for those things in the second term and the kinds of resources they are planning to bring to bear. four years ago in 2009, our country inaugurated our first-ever african-american president. we had never done that before as a nation. four years later, this weekend, we are also doing something new. we are inaugurating this particular president again. grayer, maybe even skinnier than he was before.
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wiser. definitely happy to be here. under absolutely no illusions of who he can work with and who he cannot work with. and how he can work over, under and around those who will never work with him, no matter what he proposes. i think this is going to be fun. nasal congestion? sure don't you? [ nyquil bottle ] dude! [ female announcer ] tylenol® cold multi-symptom nighttime relieves nasal congestion. nyquil® cold and flu doesn't.
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i will not negotiate around the
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debt ceiling. we're not going to do that again. i will not negotiate around the debt ceiling. we're not going to do that again. >> after president obama spent his first term, much of it at least, trying to negotiate with republicans in congress, he made it very clear recently that he would not play that same game again. on the debt ceiling. not again. and today after months of insisting that the president really did have to negotiate with them on that, republicans gave up. david corn "showdown," the stand off the president faced with republicans. thanks for being here. >> good to be here, rachel. >> eric cantore said, yeah, we're going to give up, but only for three months. what did you make of that? >> i'm the last guy who wants to cause a spike in the vix, but, you know, there are a couple of things to think about here.
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i call this plan r for run away. but we know that john boehner often has had trouble with his various plans. plan b most notoriously, getting them approved, accepted and passed by his own house republicans. and cantore made a very declarative statement today. there already immediately were grumblings that some house republicans will go along with this i'm not sure that democrats will, too. it remains to be seen whether, indeed, john boehner and cantore can get passed what they want to do. then again this is just another three-month extension. now the good news for the vix watchers out there is that this puts it past, you know, the coming showdowns on sequestration involving the budget which will all kind of
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happen in march. so this is one cliff that may not happen as two other cliffs are under way. three months from now, depending what happens with those cliffs and what happens with the economy, the house republicans, the tea partiers and the let's blow it to hell members of the republican caucus may not want to go along with this for another extension. the president has clearly won, steered them down, as he said he would, and come up with a temporary retreat that may turn into a permanent retreat. but it's still not quite resolved. >> i totally agree with you. it's not resolved and i don't think we know exactly how this will play out on the republican side and whether this three-month thing is ultimately going to fly. with republicans sort of blinking here -- and at least going to chaos mode, what do you make of the president's change in strategy on this? i mean, how do you think -- having written "showdown" how he was dealt with these things before, how he's dealing with it
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now, do you think he was evolved in how to best deal with these things? >> i think my answer is yes and no. the previous debt ceiling standoff, one of the issues was when would the next debt ceiling be reached, annoy, remember the republicans -- and even harry reid suggested that they do this every six months, get a temporary extension and come back in six months. at one point the republicans were proposing three extensions, three votes before the next election. and the president, meeting with his own aides about this said that's it. i'm done. i'm not doing this. this is not how the constitution was meant -- was designed. our founding fathers did not envision a day when members of congress could hold the president hostage by not paying the bills they themselves had racked up. and as often happens in these situations, the cooler heads on his staff said, well, mr. president, we understand how you feel, but we may have to cut the -- no, i'm not going to do it. he was very firm because he
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believed it was not just affecting him but about preserving the status of the presidency for future presidents. and in the end one of the things he was most proud of in that deal was not giving in to that. but at the time, the debt ceiling story had not been fully told. at the beginning of that fight, the poll was something like -- he asked the public, should the debt ceiling be raised, 85-1r5, against. the president was really on the wrong side. by the end of it, it had evened out in the polls and republicans ended up being blamed more so. and the economy was also in a more fragile position than it even is now. the president and people around him were much worried about what a default might do in terms of a financial crisis here and abroad. fast forward to now, and i think the president won the message debate. he convinced the public that playing hostage taking with the
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debt ceiling was the wrong thing to do. and he also now has the business community, all those people watching the vix who don't want to go through that again. he is in a much strorpg position now to take that stance that he felt back then. circumstances have made it easier for him to play this game of chicken and actually, at least, win for the next three months. >> even that is fascinating. taking it from the table with his advisers rs which you were able to report, to taking it to the podium, pounding his fist on the podium and getting his way. david corn, washington bureau chief, mother jones. >> i hope so. >> it feels like it already. starts this weekend. thank you. it's great to have you here on a friday night. >> thank you, rachel. what is it like doing your job every day when your state's government and occasionally violent protesters are trying very hard to make you stop doing your job? tonight's rachel maddow show's special report tells that story firsthand. stay tuned.
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>> women in this country have a constitutionally protected right
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to have an abortion. that ruling got second billing on front pages around the country. that's because it happened on the same day that lbj died. so, you can see there, the second story, high court rules abortions legal. state bans ruled out. it was a day when another story was getting the world's attention. that we are 40 years on from that ruling and for 40 years the anti-abortion movement has tried to render that ruling moot, try ing to -- practicing medicine under siege. that story is next. [ female announcer ] going to sleep may be easy, but when you wake up in the middle of the night it can be frustrating. it's hard to turn off and go back to sleep.
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today you see the first step in a movement, i believe, to do what we campaigned on, to say we're going to try to end abortion in mississippi. we're going to continue to try to work to end abortion in mississippi.
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and this is an historic day to begin that process. it's been seven years since we got good pro-life legislation passed out of the mississippi legislature. that's a bill that gives us a great opportunity to do -- to accomplish what our goal needs to be. our goal needs to be to end all abortions in mississippi. i believe the admitting privilege bill give us the best chance to do that.
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trying to make it impossible. the last clinic in the state, which does a lot more than provide abortions, i should say, the deadline for that kink to comply with this new state law, enacted specifically to close it down, that deadline was last friday. the day before that deadline, mississippi governor phil bryant reminded a room full of pastors at an anti-abortion luncheon why he signed that bill in the first place. >> my goal, of course, is to shut it down. >> my goal, he says, is to shut it down. after friday's deadline passed, the next step was to make the health department make an
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unofficial visit to the clinic to determine if it was in compliance. that visit happened this week. no word yet on the state's findings from the visit but the cliveng has already said publicly that it has not been able to comply with these design ed to be impossible to comply with new law. once it receives the state's report, the clinic will have ten days to ask the health department for a hearing. at that hearing the state could presumably close the clinic for good, the last clinic in the state. then there will be no legal access to abortion in the state of mississippi. the first state to have figured out a way to do that since roe versus wade, established 40 years ago this week that supposedly that could never again happen in our country. the mississippi health department's unannounced visit to the last clinic in the state happened on wednesday. that was also coincidentallily the day our producers at that show were at the clinic to document what it is like to be the last hold out in the first state that could be about to
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revert to pre-roe versus wade america. >> are we the a point right now where you don't know if the clinic will be able to stay open? >> we have no idea whether the clinic will stay open. we are letting the patients know as well what the situation is. we -- hopefully, the briefs that have been filed will -- the judge will have an opportunity to look at those and see how this law is really a trap law. >> this is the only abortion clinic in the entire state of mississippi. >> yes, it is. >> if you are forced to close your doors here, what happens to women in this state? >> we hate to think about what's going to happen to women, and their health care, in this area in the state of mississippi. from jackson, mississippi, it's three hours. any direction that they want to go. it already places a hardship on
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women because mississippi really is a poor state. we'll be here to try to give them some direction and help, no matter what happens. if the clinic is closed, someone will remain here to give them some direction for a long period of time. we know that being in this type of work there are consequences. there are consequences, as we come into work every day. we worry about lots of things. we make sure that we are safe. >> abortion is not a quick, safe, simple little deal. >> we want to make sure that the women coming to us are safe. but i have found that the women that work with other women love their jobs. and there's no keeping them away from their employment here at jackson women's health. they love their bosses. they love the owner and they love their jobs.
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>> how do you know what day is there -- >> they stream in like lemmings. you guys saw in the last half hour over 12 moms came in and are in there now. so it's pretty obvious when they're coming. >> we do take security seriously. we are ever vigilant when we come to work, when we leave work and just in the community at large. >> just like any other clinic in like low-income neighborhoods. they provide a wide variety of services and they affect people who mostly look like me, who come from backgrounds that are similar of my own. when you close these clinics, you not only end abortion centers but other women's health issues, which are so important. especially in low-income communities, women are the backbone of those communities. when you shut down clinics like these, you hurt people in so many ways.
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>> the clock is now ticking for the jackson women's health organization, the last remaining abortion clinic in the entire state of mississippi. if or when it goes, if that clinic goes, that will be it for the women of mississippi, for what is a constitutional right established 40 years ago next week by the u.s. supreme court. after the break, turns out mississippi is not alone. our special report continues. stay with us.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i am pink and i am a covergirl. ♪
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there are places in this country that look from the outside like nondescript buildings until you realize there are no windows that face the street and there's a guy hanging out at the front door, and that is an plain clothes security guard. once you get inside from one wing of the building to the other, security cameras monitoring every corner of the building. the folks who work at these places sometimes come to work in disguise and when they come to work, they take a different route each day. sometimes they park their cars off site and are driven into the office by a different person each week, who also takes a different route each time. some of them use assumed names outside the office. these places are not field offices of the nsa or the cia or
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some cagey private military contractor. these are medical offices. this is the way that medicine is being practiced in one small segment of the medical field. it is unlike anything else in american medicine, unlike any other part of american life that is not corrections or intelligence. but it is how you live if you are an abortion provider in a part of the country where aggressive hostility to abortion rights sometimes manifests as violence. these are not temporary security measures people adopt during a lockdown or at a particular time of crisis. this is day-to-day, everyday life. it is a very strange way to live or work. there are four states in this country where there is only one abortion clinic in the whole state, including mississippi, which as we discussed, is possibly becoming the first state where abortion access is, effectively, gone. it turns out that makes your one medical office and, therefore, the women who seek medical care there, it makes them easy targets for people who would like to end abortion in that
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state through harassment, intimidation or through state government. trying to understand the constitutional edge that we are on right now in terms of abortion rights existing on paper versus existing in reality. part one of our special report yesterday was about recovering and regaining access to abortion rights in a part of the country where that access was ended 3 1/2 years ago by murder. that was kansas, where that constitutional right is being protected and regained by a very savvy and determined group and were the focus of last night's special report, part one. tonight, mississippi, which as we just talked about, may become the first state in the country where that constitutional right is not successfully defended. and it goes away. in the middle of those two benchmarks are the three other states where there is only one clinic. it turns out that practicing medicine in that circumstance and being a patient in that circumstance is both a hard thing and a very interesting thing. producers from this show visited each of these states this week
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to find out 40 years after roe what it's like for the people who live this way, who are the only abortion provider in their state, the only thing making a right to an abortion a real right where they live and where they work. some of them spoke to us on the record, on camera. and some of them ask that we conceal their faces for their safety. watch. >> it is very hostile here. there's no question about it. there are certainly other states that also have hostile climates for women's health. but south dakota is its own unique monster in so many ways. it is a climate that is influenced, in part, by outside agitators who view south dakota as an easy mark. >> when you're the only provider in a state, you become a target for both your local people who disagree with the services you
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offer and you get put on the national radar and you get put on the national map. people would like to say this state is the first abortion-free state. they would like to just completely get rid of all of the clinics and say no abortions happen here. when i walk into the clinic and there's protesters outside, they're using my name and they say things to me as if we're friends and as if we know each other. it doesn't happen in any other business where people are allowed to act like stalkers and use your first name and, you know, try to intimidate you on your way into work. there's no place elsewhere you would work where somebody would be allowed to act that way. >> now i have young children. well, three, 13, 14 and just turned 16. and it affects me in that they are sometimes harassed at school.
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the anti-choice forces have gone to the schools and actually leafletted my neighborhood with my picture and defamatory statements made concerning me. and so it has affected me in that way. but i think it's actually strengthened my children. we've had long discussions about the need for choice and the need for the service. making abortion illegal just kills women. it doesn't stop abortion. >> do you ever worry about your safety? >> i always look around before i step out of a door. but, again, i'm on social security and medicare and have had a good life and, you know, somebody has to do this. and i won't be intimidated. >> south dakota, north dakota,
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arkansas. the reasons why each of these states have only one clinic vary from state to state. mississippi, too. but in each of these states it was not always the case. each of these states used to have more than one abortion provider and in each of these states only one clinic is now left. and the same intimidation and targeting that in many cases helped shrink the abortion clinic population down to one in each of these states makes it all but certain that no one else will try to open another clinic in these states any time soon. >> in the early '70s, after roe v. wade, there were 17 physicians providing abortion services in central arkansas. as the anti-choice forces became more and more well versed in their coercive tactics, these physicians started to dwindle. by the time i entered abortion practice in 1985, there were five physicians in little rock and one in fayetteville doing
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terminations. now we have younger physicians from out of state come in so i can go on vacation or get a break. but if you're not going to be an abortion provider, soly an abortion provider, then you're going to have severe consequences with the practice outside of the rest of your practice. if you're an ob/gyn, you'll lose patient. if you have partners, they're going to harass you about your abortion services. so over time, we have become the sole provider. because of attrition. >> there is no question that if other providers in this state would also help women, would also provide abortion services,
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we wouldn't be so isolated and it would be much less easy, it would be more difficult for outside forces to pressure us and it would be more difficult for them to get some of this terrible legislation passed. and it would create a whole different atmosphere. so i really do think that the fact that we are the only provider is an enormous problem. and it's an opportunity for the other side to target us and to target women's access to health care and to target women. >> these providers are the only ones left in their state who are sticking it out carrying concealed weapons, although some of them do. it is about doing a job that is important and that they think is
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rewarding. they may have to fight protesters in their own state governments and fear violent extremists who threaten them. but they are basically happy warriors, who believe in their work and find it satisfying work. they are glad to be doing what they do. >> being in planned parenthood in south dakota is where the rubber meets the road for women individually and for the future of the movement. for reproductive rights here in this country. it is very, very challenging to do this work here. it is like no other place. and for that reason, it is in some ways the most meaningful part of our whole movement, and certainly what i do every day. i have never looked back, ever looked back. and to this day and i think until the day i die i will consider this work to be the most important work i have ever down. >> it is the morally right thing to do. we are needed.
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our skills, our level of care is needed by our patients. and so despite the obstacles that we face i think it is extraordinarily important. it is also very rewarding. our patients are often very, very grateful for the care and kindness that they receive from us. >> it is hard to imagine the appreciation that my patients show me. they -- many don't understand. but a lot do understand the sacrifices that we in this clinic, not just me, but the rest of the staff of this clinic make, personal sacrifices to provide for their care. and that -- that makes me feel really good about my practice. it makes me feel good about what i'm doing. >> you don't work in a place like fargo, north dakota if you
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are not committed to providing that service and if it doesn't give you rewards back. and the stories i hear from women, the information they give us, the stories they tell us. the emotions they display, that is what keeps me coming day after day is to be able to help those women through a really difficult time in their life. and there is a lot of satisfaction with that. because they're so thankful and i think that we change them in that moment. we make the world a better place for them by treating them with respect. by treating them kindly and giving them an experience that we hope will kind of set the tone for the next phase of their life. >> roe v wade, the single remaining providers in mississippi and north dakota and south dakota and arkansas are the only reason that is accessible to them in those states.
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the single remaining providers have to be able to stick it out even when it is not easy, even in the face of protest and by their own state governments. that is what they have committed to do. we'll be right back. . could . new nectresse. the 100% natural no-calorie sweetener made from the goodness of fruit. new nectresse. sweetness naturally. are you flo? yes. is this the thing you gave my husband? well, yeah, yes. the "name your price" tool. you tell us the price you want to pay, and we give you a range of options to choose from. careful, though -- that kind of power can go to your head. that explains a lot. yo, buddy! i got this. gimme one, gimme one, gimme one! the power of the "name your price" tool. only from progressive.
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you may want to get a pen and paper, here is what your weekend looks like. okay, i can hold on for a second, get a pen. okay, ready? chris hayes and melissa harris-perry are going to broadcast their shows live this weekend, saturday, 8 a.m. eastern, on sunday, it will be chris hayes who covers vice president joe biden's private swearing in for his second term, conducted by the supreme court justice. saturday morning, excuse me,
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sunday morning, and 11:55 a.m., just before noon on sunday, president obama will be sworn in privately in the blue room. by chief justice john roberts, that will be nbc's chuck todd before noon on sunday. that is just the beginning, msnbc's live coverage will continue sunday night at 8:00 eastern, we'll have a reception, a very beautiful building, a candle light reception, the president and vice president are expected to attend that reception, along with dr. jill biden, that is sunday night. and monday, fancier, that is the big day, the big public ceremony of the inauguration. morning joe is going to be live from d.c., starting at 6:00. and president obama will attend church service that morning at
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8:45 at st. john's church. he will have a closed meeting with congress. in terms of how you can follow along with what is happening on the big day on monday, i will anchor our coverage here at 10:00, with chris matthews, the reverend al sharpton, our coverage starting at 10:00, and vice president joe biden will are sworn in, at 11:55, president obama will be sworn in by chief justice john roberts, and the president will deliver his second inaugural address. there will be the singing of the national anthem, then by a person named beyonce who you may have heard of. there will be the signing ceremony, and of course, the parade. there is a lot going on. it is a big day. we're going to be covering all of it starting at 10:00 eastern on monday, and then monday night